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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: China
A sign of a fragile economic system
China's first major financial bankruptcy
By John Christian and Peter Symonds
30 January 1999
China's first major bankruptcy of a financial institution--the
Guangdong International Trust and Investment Corporation (Gitic)
in mid-January--underscores the fragility of the country's financial
system and the likelihood of further major restructuring and closures
as the growth rate continues to decline.
Gitic, which was formed in 1980s as a means for attracting
foreign investment to Guangdong province, was first closed and
put into the hands of a liquidation committee last October. The
corporation was declared bankrupt at a meeting of investors on
January 10 with debts to the tune of $US4.5 billion.
International banks and financial institutions reacted adversely
to the decision by the Chinese government not to intervene to
prop up a corporation which many believed had been guaranteed
by its immediate owner, the Guangdong provincial government, and
therefore by Beijing itself.
The liquidation committee established by China's central bank,
the People's Bank of China, also announced that 25,000 individual
creditors would be paid before banks and foreign investors. Committee
head Wu Jiesi said: "To my knowledge, China's bankruptcy
law does not provide for priority for foreign creditors."
Almost half of the $4.5 billion is owed overseas.
The crisis worsened a few days later when it was revealed that
a second major investment company--Guangdong Enterprises (GDE)--was
facing insolvency with liabilities of $US3.2 billion. At a meeting
on January 12, about 400 representative of 80 bank creditors learned
that the injection of more than $300 million by the provincial
government had failed to solve its financial problems. Goldman
Sachs is already overseeing the restructuring of GDE, which has
substantial interests in brewing, building and tanning. Now the
company is asking its creditors for a stay of three months on
its principal loan repayments.
China has 240 non-bank investment houses or Itics, many of
which are in financial difficulty. The Guangzhou International
Trust Corporation (Gzitic), the investment arm of the Guangzhou,
the provincial capital of Guangdong, is reported to be under pressure
from creditors to repay $US35 million borrowed to finance a chemical
plant. The Dalian International Trust and Investment Corp (DITIC),
has also defaulted on loan repayments and has overall borrowings
of over $2 billion.
A number of economic commentators have warned that the Chinese
government will allow the number of such investment houses to
fall to 70 or even less. The exposure of foreign financial institutions
to Chinese Itics is estimated to be between $10 billion and $15
billion. The financial problems of these non-bank finance corporations
points to an even more fundamental underlying crisis of the banking
system as a whole. According to some commentators, the level of
bad loans held by China's state banks amounts to $212 billion
or 25 percent of all lending.
It is no accident that the debt difficulties have emerged in
Guangdong. Over the past two decades the province bordering Hong
Kong has been a hothouse of capitalist development. Overseas companies
have signed 200,000 contracts and provided at least $80 billion
in investment, more than one third of the national total, in order
to exploit the opportunities of establish cheap labour manufacturing
enterprises. More than 11 million migrant workers from poorer
inland provinces have flooded into the area to live in crowded
dormitories and work under atrocious conditions.
The economic boom in Guangdong has provided plenty of opportunities
for local bureaucrats and entrepreneurs to act as middlemen and
to cash in on the associated speculation in property and shares.
The provincial government has also been able to gain a measure
of local autonomy through Gitic and other investment houses from
the national government. One of Beijing's reasons for closing
down the Guangdong corporations is to reassert its own control
over the economy. The initial decision to shut down the Guangdong
International Trust and Investment Corporation came after a visit
to the province by the Chinese Premier Zhu Rongji last October.
But the financial instability is part of a broader crisis stemming
from the economic recession throughout the rest of Asia, and internationally.
China's exports to Asia have slumped as a result of the downturn
in the region. Furthermore, it is now having to compete with cheaper
goods manufactured in countries like Indonesia and Thailand where
the value of the currencies have fallen markedly. Under pressure
from the US, Japan and other powers, China has not so far devalued
its currency in a bid to cheapen its exports.
China's official economic growth rate fell in 1998 to 7.8 percent
and is expected to be even less this year. Some commentators,
however, claim that the official figures are inflated and estimate
last year's growth at only 5 percent. The economic slowdown has
undermined the frenzy of speculation and threatens to trigger
off further financial collapses in China and neighbouring Hong
Kong, which has acted as a funnel for foreign investment into
China. The value of the so-called Hang Seng Red Chip Index on
Hong Kong's stockmarket--a measure of the value of mainland stocks--fell
by a massive 48 percent during 1998.
Over the last two decades, the Beijing bureaucracy has moved
rapidly to open up the Chinese economy to international finance
capital and to encourage the growth of private enterprises. Over
the next year, the government plans to shut down many of the country's
state-owned industries, throwing millions of workers out of work.
The collapse of Gitic and other major finance houses will further
accelerate the economic and social crisis.
See Also:
Protests of workers and farmers
Social tensions rise in China
[22 January 1999]
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